Seoul: South Korea and the United States urged North Korea to implement the disarmament pledges it made in past talks, saying Thursday the allies will keep pushing for diplomacy aimed at achieving the North’s complete denuclearization.
A joint statement, issued by South Korean Defence Minister Jeong Kyeong-doo and US Defence Secretary Mark T. Esper, comes a day after North Korea abruptly announced it would suspend steps that would have nullified 2018 tension-reduction deals and further raised animosities on the Korean Peninsula.
In the statement primarily marking the 70th anniversary of the start of the Korean War, the allies' defense chiefs said they remain firmly committed to defending the hard-fought peace on the Korean Peninsula, to include supporting ongoing diplomatic efforts for the complete denuclearization of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. That is the North’s official name.
Jeong and Esper also said they also call on North Korea to meet its commitments in alignment with the joint statements issued after US-North Korea summit talks in Singapore in June 2018 and inter-Korean talks in September 2018.
Read |North Korea suspends military action plans against South
In the joint statement issued after the Singapore summit with President Donald Trump, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said his country commits to work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula without specifying how and when disarmament steps would take place. North Korea used similar language previously when it demanded the US to withdraw its 28,500 troops from South Korea and end regular military drills as a precondition for its nuclear disarmament.